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Evaluating Post-Radiotherapy Laryngeal Function with Laryngeal Videostroboscopy in Early Stage Glottic Cancer

OBJECTIVE: Dysphonia is common among patients with early stage glottic cancer. Laryngeal videostroboscopy (LVS) has not been routinely used to assess post-radiotherapy (RT) voice changes. We hypothesized that LVS would demonstrate improvement in laryngeal function after definitive RT for early-stage...

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Autores principales: Marciscano, Ariel E., Charu, Vivek, Starmer, Heather M., Best, Simon R., Quon, Harry, Hillel, Alexander T., Akst, Lee M., Kiess, Ana P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5467001/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28660173
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2017.00124
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author Marciscano, Ariel E.
Charu, Vivek
Starmer, Heather M.
Best, Simon R.
Quon, Harry
Hillel, Alexander T.
Akst, Lee M.
Kiess, Ana P.
author_facet Marciscano, Ariel E.
Charu, Vivek
Starmer, Heather M.
Best, Simon R.
Quon, Harry
Hillel, Alexander T.
Akst, Lee M.
Kiess, Ana P.
author_sort Marciscano, Ariel E.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Dysphonia is common among patients with early stage glottic cancer. Laryngeal videostroboscopy (LVS) has not been routinely used to assess post-radiotherapy (RT) voice changes. We hypothesized that LVS would demonstrate improvement in laryngeal function after definitive RT for early-stage glottic cancer. STUDY DESIGN: Blinded retrospective review of perceptual voice and stroboscopic parameters for patients with early glottic cancer and controls. SETTING: High-volume, single-institution academic medical center. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Fifteen patients underwent RT for Tis-T2N0M0 glottic cancer and were evaluated with serial LVS exams pre- and post-RT. Stroboscopic assessment included six parameters: vocal fold (VF) vibration, VF mobility, erythema/edema, supraglottic compression, glottic closure, and secretions. Grade, roughness, breathiness, asthenia, strain (GRBAS) voice perceptual scale was graded in tandem with LVS score. Assessments were grouped by time interval from RT: pre-RT, 0–4, 4–12, and >12 months post-RT. RESULTS: 60 LVS exams and corresponding GRBAS assessments were reviewed. There were significant improvements in ipsilateral VF motion (P = 0.03) and vibration (P = 0.001) and significant worsening in contralateral VF motion (P < 0.001) and vibration (P = 0.008) at >12 months post-RT. Glottic closure significantly worsened, most prominent >12 months post-RT (P = 0.01). Composite GRBAS scores were significantly improved across all post-RT intervals. CONCLUSION: LVS proved to be a robust tool for assessing pre- and post-RT laryngeal function. We observed post-RT improvement in ipsilateral VF function, a decline in contralateral VF function, and decreased glottic closure. These results demonstrate that LVS can detect meaningful changes in VF and glottic function and support its use for post-RT evaluation of glottic cancer patients.
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spelling pubmed-54670012017-06-28 Evaluating Post-Radiotherapy Laryngeal Function with Laryngeal Videostroboscopy in Early Stage Glottic Cancer Marciscano, Ariel E. Charu, Vivek Starmer, Heather M. Best, Simon R. Quon, Harry Hillel, Alexander T. Akst, Lee M. Kiess, Ana P. Front Oncol Oncology OBJECTIVE: Dysphonia is common among patients with early stage glottic cancer. Laryngeal videostroboscopy (LVS) has not been routinely used to assess post-radiotherapy (RT) voice changes. We hypothesized that LVS would demonstrate improvement in laryngeal function after definitive RT for early-stage glottic cancer. STUDY DESIGN: Blinded retrospective review of perceptual voice and stroboscopic parameters for patients with early glottic cancer and controls. SETTING: High-volume, single-institution academic medical center. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Fifteen patients underwent RT for Tis-T2N0M0 glottic cancer and were evaluated with serial LVS exams pre- and post-RT. Stroboscopic assessment included six parameters: vocal fold (VF) vibration, VF mobility, erythema/edema, supraglottic compression, glottic closure, and secretions. Grade, roughness, breathiness, asthenia, strain (GRBAS) voice perceptual scale was graded in tandem with LVS score. Assessments were grouped by time interval from RT: pre-RT, 0–4, 4–12, and >12 months post-RT. RESULTS: 60 LVS exams and corresponding GRBAS assessments were reviewed. There were significant improvements in ipsilateral VF motion (P = 0.03) and vibration (P = 0.001) and significant worsening in contralateral VF motion (P < 0.001) and vibration (P = 0.008) at >12 months post-RT. Glottic closure significantly worsened, most prominent >12 months post-RT (P = 0.01). Composite GRBAS scores were significantly improved across all post-RT intervals. CONCLUSION: LVS proved to be a robust tool for assessing pre- and post-RT laryngeal function. We observed post-RT improvement in ipsilateral VF function, a decline in contralateral VF function, and decreased glottic closure. These results demonstrate that LVS can detect meaningful changes in VF and glottic function and support its use for post-RT evaluation of glottic cancer patients. Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-06-12 /pmc/articles/PMC5467001/ /pubmed/28660173 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2017.00124 Text en Copyright © 2017 Marciscano, Charu, Starmer, Best, Quon, Hillel, Akst and Kiess. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Oncology
Marciscano, Ariel E.
Charu, Vivek
Starmer, Heather M.
Best, Simon R.
Quon, Harry
Hillel, Alexander T.
Akst, Lee M.
Kiess, Ana P.
Evaluating Post-Radiotherapy Laryngeal Function with Laryngeal Videostroboscopy in Early Stage Glottic Cancer
title Evaluating Post-Radiotherapy Laryngeal Function with Laryngeal Videostroboscopy in Early Stage Glottic Cancer
title_full Evaluating Post-Radiotherapy Laryngeal Function with Laryngeal Videostroboscopy in Early Stage Glottic Cancer
title_fullStr Evaluating Post-Radiotherapy Laryngeal Function with Laryngeal Videostroboscopy in Early Stage Glottic Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating Post-Radiotherapy Laryngeal Function with Laryngeal Videostroboscopy in Early Stage Glottic Cancer
title_short Evaluating Post-Radiotherapy Laryngeal Function with Laryngeal Videostroboscopy in Early Stage Glottic Cancer
title_sort evaluating post-radiotherapy laryngeal function with laryngeal videostroboscopy in early stage glottic cancer
topic Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5467001/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28660173
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2017.00124
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